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Saturday, December 27, 2008

Ethereal Eartha

Some people attract your attention, even from an early age, because they are unique.

Eartha Kitt was a very, very unique presence.

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It could have been her features; a strange blend of African-American and Asian, with those feline eyes spread just a little too far apart. It could have been her lithe and sinewy body which seemed especially carved for the most delicious of sinful pleasures. Or it could have been that voice… a voice unlike any other... a voice like electric velvet with a tickle of French filtered through the throat of a Persian cat.


Early Eartha Memory:

As a child, I recall watching Merv Griffin several times when she was a guest. I wondered then: WHY is Eartha Kitt always crying and whimpering about her past? You’re a star now, woman! Get over it! But I was a kid. I didn’t quite get how the past still lives within us, how it can still infect us, especially when it was full of pain and rejection.

She persevered through an unhappy childhood as a mixed-race daughter of the South. She often spoke of being abused, neglected, unwanted because her 'yella gal' skin tone and because of how different she looked. She even wondered who her real parents were... because it seemed that no one really "wanted" her.

Well Hollywood wanted her, for a time. Hollywood was the perfect place for unique people. And in an era when women of color were relegated to roles of mammies and maids, Eartha Kitt (along with the beauteous Dorothy Dandridge) changed the perception of Black women by showing them to be sensuous, sexy, and yes, beautiful.


For a time she dated filmmaker Orson Welles, and it was he who proclaimed her to be "The World's Most Exciting Woman!"

High praise indeed, for a "Colored" woman... in Ike's America.

Her career would span six decades, from her start as a dancer with the famed Katherine Dunham troupe to cabarets and acting and singing on stage, in movies and on television. She had a hit recording with a sexy rendition of the song "Santa Baby."

She was cast as mysterious women and sizzling exotics in the 1950s. Later, she became a fiercer Catwoman than even the cat-like Julie Newmar in the Batman series. She was a puurrrrrfect choice. This was the role that I, and many from my generation would best associate with the name Eartha Kitt.

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But she was famous before and after wrecking havoc on Gotham City.


And then, being a self-possessed, outspoken woman with her own mind, she made headlines in the 1960s for denouncing the Vietnam War during a visit to the White House. Lady Bird Johnson was NOT amused! For Eartha, speaking the truth amounted to nothing short of career suicide. The Johnson administration saw to it that suddenly Eartha Kitt could find no more employment in this country. Shameful!

Hurt from this blatant blacklisting but still hungry to entertain, she left this country and headed to a more embracing Europe. She would make a spectacle of herself there. To their credit and good taste, those Europeans just loved them some Eartha Kitt!


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Through the years, Kitt remained a picture of vitality and elegance. She attracted fans less than half her age even as she neared 80. She died on Christmas Day at the age of 81.

The Kitt-woman is gone now, like so many legends before her. But the next time you see Halle Berry or Alicia Keyes, Mariah Carey or Faith Evans, Kelis or Jennifer Beals, Rosario Dawson or Victoria Rowell, Sade or Thandie Newton, Tamia or Paula Patton, Nicole Ari Parker or Mya, Corrine Bailey Rae or Leona Lewis emoting on the screen or singing on stages, it would be nice and fitting to remember Eartha Kitt… because without her contribution, the careers of those exotic bi-racial others may not have been possible.

Rest In Peace, Eartha!

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13 comments:

Jimmy said...

Great post!

Very informative.

I am to young to have remembered her, so it was a good history lesson, thanks!

Babz Rawls Ivy said...

I do so appreciate your lovingly penned memorial.

Anonymous said...

I LOVE Eartha Kitt. Will ALWAYS love her. Wow great topic and good handling of it on this post, my man. Eartha was one of those black women who - now know this, I was born and raised in northern "all white" Michigan in the 50's - all the "colored women" I saw were on TV with processed white-wannabe hair and playing maids and BS stereotype roles, so hey - I didn't know black women had their OWN real beauty. Eartha was a major discovery to me as a young person. I saw the beauty of the woman of color in her. Never left me, that impression.

and her talent was off the hook. And she was REAL. Not afraid to be transparent. Wonderful human being.

Hey that photo on top of this post - doesn't she kind of favor Angela Basset in that flick?

D-Place said...

This is the best write up that I've seen on Eartha! Thank you.

Carleen Brice said...

Hail to the Queen! When I read the obit in the NY Times I wanted to cry for how bad her childhood was, but look how she overcame.

Mizrepresent said...

Oh yeah Miz Kitt was the real deal...a great icon!

Queen Infinite Wisdom said...

peace! Great article, but you know her father is white, right?

Queen Infinite Wisdom said...

Yes I realized you mentioned that she was bi-racial but you also mentioned she had Asian in her.That's all I'm responding to.

Moanerplicity said...

Ravynn:

I don't believe Ms. Kitt had any Asian blood (though I haven't looked too deeply into the roots of her family tree). I was speaking on the uniqueness of her physical look. The eyes & their shape were slightly Asian in contrast to her other Negroid features. I'm aware that her father was a white man, though his identity has been shrouded in secrecy and conjecture for decades.

I hope this had been made clearer now in case I confused anyone of Ms. Kitt's heritage.


One.

Keith said...

Great Post...She will be truly missed. I too was introduced to her by seeing her play the Cat-Woman on Batman as a child. My Parents told me about her long storied career in the 50's and how she trained with Marlon Brando and Marilyn Monroe, but never got a fraction of the noteriety those two did. We've lost so many greats this year..She was certainly one of them.

Babz Rawls Ivy said...

happy new year!

The Ginger Darlings said...

Eartha Kit was the closest a human can get to being cat. Beautiful, growling, under-appreciated goddess woman.

Anonymous said...

i was first introduced to eartha kitt through the batman series, and then later, in boomerang. i know this doesn't do her career justice, but each time i saw her, i remember thinking how incredibly beautiful she was; that she simply possessed this beautiful, glowing spirit that was both captivating and utterly amazing. as a young bi-racial girl, growing up in a society, and in a family, that rarely acknowledged this kind of beauty, her example left an indelible stamp on my psyche. this was a lovely memorial.